NSAC's Blog

America’s Great Outdoors Initiative to Support Conservation and Working Lands

February 18, 2011

On February 16, 2011, President Obama released a report outlining the Administration’s plan to enhance conservation of public and private lands through the America’s Great Outdoors (AGO) Initiative. The AGO Initiative is a partnership between the Department of Agriculture (USDA ), Department of the Interior (DOI), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). According to the Administration, the report is based on 51 public listening sessions and more than 105,000 submitted comments.

Specific recommendations and action items include:

Establish the interagency AGO Council to achieve more cooperation and collaboration among federal agencies engaged in conservation and recreation;

Coordinate and align federal programs that provide technical or financial assistance to public and private organizations that support and implement collaborative landscape-scale conservation initiatives (including USDA conservation programs);

Maintain the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) at 32 million acres through the terms of the 2008 Farm Bill and focus part of the program on landscape conservation, including work that benefits wildlife, water quality and quantity, and other valuable resources;

Support the development and expansion of new markets, including those for the environmental services provided by working lands, for local agricultural or sustainable forest products, sustainable energy, and others;

Expand partnerships with private landowners that facilitate access to or across private lands for recreation through programs such as the USDA Voluntary Public Access Program; and

Promote the use of safe harbor and candidate conservation agreements and collaborate with Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service to streamline permitting processes with agreements and memoranda of understanding that promote conservation objectives; work with USDA in combining Farm Bill conservation program dollars where appropriate.

According to the report, in addition to providing financial and technical assistance for conservation to landowners, it is essential to both maintain traditional markets for food, fiber and wood products and develop new and expanded markets for environmental services, agricultural products, biomass energy, and sustainably harvested wood products.

The interagency partnership expects the AGO Council–within 180 days of its establishment–to publish a plan with assignments and timelines to improve agency coordination, align federal programs, and implement the report.

The President launched the AGO Initiative in April 2010 to help shape his conservation policy. The launch included a presidential memorandum outlining broad goals, including encouraging sustainable use of private land, connecting wildlife migration and other natural corridors, encouraging outdoor recreation and conservation, and forming coalitions with local government and the private sector.

NSAC submitted a public comment on the Initiative to USDA conservation and environment senior leadership. The comment called attention to the critical role played by USDA working agricultural lands conservation programs in advancing the Initiative’s goals.

The NSAC statement also took the Administration to task for proposing to reduce USDA private lands conservation spending, a reality that has to our great disappointment reoccurred in the FY 2012 Obama Budget Request. On Monday, the President proposed slashing over $1 billion from USDA conservation programs, a budget proposal that appears strongly at odds with the AGO announcement two days later.